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TexasTowelie

(116,755 posts)
Sat Jan 1, 2022, 08:28 PM Jan 2022

Minnesota mathematicians, data scientists use new technology to shape political districts

Political map-making requires a tedious series of adjustments, each one with the potential to disrupt the balance.

Trying to evenly redistribute population among districts — required by the U.S. Constitution each decade after the census count — may mean dividing a county or city. A district that's physically compact might also be one that splits up a minority community.

But what if a computer could do all that monotonous work instead?

That's a question a group of a dozen mathematicians and data scientists put to the test using advanced computational technology — until now only used in court battles — to run through millions of redistricting scenarios. They argue that by using science they've created a set of exceptionally fair congressional and legislative redistricting maps for Minnesota, ones no expert or a team of experts could hope to draw themselves.

"The number of combinations is astronomical," said Sam Hirsch, an attorney who has been involved in redistricting cases for decades and helped assemble the group. "A decade ago, the kinds of things we're doing were not known and were not possible."

Read more: https://www.startribune.com/minnesota-mathematicians-data-scientists-use-new-technology-to-shape-political-districts/600131871/

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Minnesota mathematicians, data scientists use new technology to shape political districts (Original Post) TexasTowelie Jan 2022 OP
yes IbogaProject Jan 2022 #1

IbogaProject

(3,646 posts)
1. yes
Sat Jan 1, 2022, 11:07 PM
Jan 2022

The issue will be by what measures will it be judged to be most fair. Political affiliation, ethnic percentage of the whole state, economic distribution.

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